Students from all health sciences disciplines interview a health mentor during their first meeting in spring 2011.

Medical School Expands Interprofessional Education

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By Tonia Twichell

(May 2, 2011) Dr. Mark Earnest uses a simple quiz to prove that medical school education needs to include students from other health specialties to improve safety and quality for patients.

It involves asking people to read a short paragraph about what sounds like a robbery. He asks participants to individually answer 18 questions about that paragraph, and then has everyone gather in groups and answer the questions as a team.

While some individuals answered as few as eight questions correctly, the teams scored much higher – nearly double in some cases.

Translate that to health care, where doctors, nurses, pharmacists and other professionals have traditionally worked in parallel universes, and you begin to see why patients could benefit from a more cohesive approach.

“When I trained, there wasn’t anything mentioned about interprofessionalism other than the general notion that you’re supposed to be nice to the people around you,” says Earnest, director of interprofessional education at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. “There was no thought about a team function.”

At the medical campus, a giant step forward comes in the form of nearly $2 million in grants designed to kick start campus-wide, team-based learning.

Starting in February 2011, about 80 students from medicine, nursing, pharmacy, physical therapy and physician assistant programs began a pilot project that involves teams of four to six students working together with health mentors - patients in the community with chronic physical or mental illnesses or disabilities.

The teams will document the mentor’s medical history and engage in all aspects of the mentor’s health care over the next year.

In the fall, the program will expand to a two-year program that will include all first-year medical students working with students from the other schools and colleges. Other aspects of the grants from the Josiah Macy Jr. and Colorado Health foundations include TeamSTEPPS which teaches communication methods using simulated medical situations, and the Interprofessional Clinical Rotations Program.

The goal is to teach students to work in teams to improve patient care while they are still in school, in the hope that they will carry that over to their clinical practices.

Both Earnest and Foundations of Doctoring Curriculum Director Wendy Madigosky point to the 1999 Institute of Medicine report ‘To Err is Human’ as a “call to arms” for changes in the medical profession.

“It said that as many as 100,000 people died every year due to medical errors,” Earnest says. “I thought, ‘That just can’t be true.’ But looking around and thinking about things, I realized that we often didn’t consider things that went wrong to be errors. It was simply the best that we could do in the circumstances and culture we worked in”

Madigosky points out that there are essential communication modes that differ drastically between doctors and nurses.

“For example, in the hospitals, nurses and doctors write on different parts of the patient charts, and they don’t always know how to read each other’s notes. The doctor will tend to write the orders, but the nurses are more descriptive. They’ll write more about functionality. Doctors wouldn’t necessarily understand that.

“We need to move to a more common language. Nurses have a great communication technique called Situational Background Assessment Recommendation. They all know it. When they talk to a doctor, they may use SBAR, but the doctors don’t know SBAR. They don’t know it’s the nurses’ ‘cockpit language’ to explain something important. For nurses, it’s agreed-upon language, and they all use it.

“These are the kind of things we need to fix.”

The idea that health care education had to change in order to improve patient care was already such an accepted concept when the Anschutz Medical Campus was built that it was designed by multi-disciplinary faculty task force to support team-based learning with shared classrooms and study rooms not just for professions, but also geared for subjects – Rural Health Care, Trauma Care, etc. The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching calls the campus”a model of what an academic medical center should look like today.”

But changing the culture is still a challenge.

Scheduling, for example, can be a nightmare.

“If you ask nursing students to block out a three-hour chunk of time on a Wednesday afternoon for interprofessionalism, that takes away 10 percent of the possible clinical placement times,” Earnest said.

“My goal is to graduate students who know this fundamentally, not just in their head, but with an almost instinctive ‘What am I a part of?’ reflection in their clinical roles. Not’ What do I do?’ But ‘What am I a part of?’” Earnest says. “That is not a part of health professionals’ thinking now.”